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Riksdag

Coordinates: 59°19′39″N 18°04′03″E / 59.32750°N 18.06750°E / 59.32750; 18.06750
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Parliament of Sweden

riksdagen, Sveriges riksdag
Coat of arms or logo
Type
Type
Leadership
Per Westerberg, (m)
since 2 October 2006
First Deputy Speaker
Susanne Eberstein, (s)
since 2010
Second Deputy Speaker
Ulf Holm, (mp)
since 2010
Third Deputy Speaker
Jan Ertsborn, (fp)
since 2012
Structure
Seats349
Current Structure of the Swedish Parliament
Political groups
Government
  •   Moderate Party (107)
  •   Centre Party (23)
  •   Liberal People's Party (24)
  •   Christian Democrats (19)


Opposition

Elections
Party-list proportional representation
Sainte-Laguë method
See Elections in Sweden
Last election
19 September 2010
Meeting place
Parliament House, Stockholm
Parliament House
Helgeandsholmen
Stockholm, 100 12
Kingdom of Sweden
Website
Swedish Parliament

The parliament (officially Template:Lang-sv or Sveriges riksdag) is the national legislative assembly and the supreme decision-making body in the Kingdom of Sweden. The parliament is, since constitutional reforms taking effect in 1971, a unicameral legislature with 349 members (Template:Lang-sv), elected on a proportional basis and serving, from 1994 onwards, on fixed four year terms.

The constitutional functions of the Riksdag are enumerated in the Instrument of Government (Template:Lang-sv), and its internal workings are specified in greater detail in the Riksdag Act (Template:Lang-sv.[1][2]

The seat of the Riksdag is at Parliament House (Template:Lang-sv), on the island of Helgeandsholmen in the central parts of Stockholm. The Riksdag has its institutional roots in the feudal Riksdag of the Estates, by tradition thought to have first assembled in Arboga in 1435, and in 1866 following reforms of the 1809 Instrument of Government that body was transformed into a bicameral legislature with an upper chamber (Template:Lang-sv) and a lower chamber (Template:Lang-sv).

The next general election is scheduled to be held on 21 September 2014.

Organizational overview

  • Speaker of the Riksdag: Per Westerberg (since October 2006)
  • Chamber: unicameral with 349 members
  • Elections: Members are elected by popular vote on a proportional representation basis to serve four-year terms. In the election year, the elections are held on the third Sunday of September, though pending legislation would move the election day to the second Sunday of September.
  • Elections last held: 19 September 2010
The chamber voting in 2009.
The former second chamber, nowadays used for committee meetings.
The Riksdag building exterior, from the west, at night.

Constitutional basis

The riksdag performs the normal functions of a parliament in a parliamentary democracy. It enacts laws, amends the constitution and appoints a government. In most parliamentary democracies, the head of state commissions a politician to form a government. Under the new Instrument of Government[3] (one of the four fundamental laws of the Constitution) enacted in 1974, that task was removed from the Monarch of Sweden and given to the Speaker of the Riksdag. To make changes to the Constitution under the new Instrument of Government, amendments must be approved twice by Parliament, in two successive electoral periods with a regular general election held in between.

An amendment must be introduced into Parliament nine months prior to such an election unless a 5/6 majority of the Committee on the Constitution authorises it. If one tenth of the members motions for a referendum to block the amendment and one third of Parliament backs the motion, a referendum will be held. Such a referendum can only defeat a proposed amendment.

Members of the Riksdag

As of 2008, 47 percent of the members of the riksdag are women. This is the world's second highest proportion of females in a national parliament—behind only Rwanda—and the highest in the industrialized world.

A member of the riksdag is working full-time with his mandate and has a salary of 56 000 SEK (around $ 8,800) per month.[4]

According to a survey investigation by the sociologist Jenny Hansson, Swedish national parliamentarians have an average work week of 66 hours, including side responsibilities. Hansson's investigation further reports that the average Swedish national parliamentarian sleeps 6.5 hours per night.[5]

Government

After holding talks with leaders of the various party groups in the Riksdag, the Speaker of the Riksdag nominates a Prime Minister. The nomination is then put to a vote. Unless an absolute majority of the members (175 members) vote "no", the nomination is confirmed, otherwise it is rejected. The Speaker must then find a new nominee. This means the Riksdag can consent to a Prime Minister without casting any "yes" votes.

After being elected the Prime Minister appoints the Cabinet Ministers and announces them to the Riksdag. The new government becomes effective with a first meeting held before the head of state, the King of Sweden, at which the Speaker of the Riksdag announces to the King that the Riksdag has elected a new government.

Parliament can cast a vote of no confidence against any single member of the government, thus forcing a resignation. To succeed a vote of no confidence must be supported by an absolute majority (175 members) or it has failed.

If a vote of no confidence is cast against the Prime Minister (Sw. Statsminister), this means the entire government is rejected. A losing government has one week to call for a general election or else the procedure of nominating a new Prime Minister starts afresh.

Politics

Political parties are strong in Sweden, with members of the Riksdag usually supporting their parties in parliamentary votes. In most cases, governments can command the support of the majority in the Riksdag, allowing the government to control the parliamentary agenda.

For many years, no single political party in Sweden has managed to gain more than 50% of the votes, so political parties with similar agendas cooperate on several issues, forming coalition governments or other formalized alliances. Currently, two major blocs exist in parliament, the socialist/green Red-Greens and the conservative/liberal Alliance for Sweden. The latter, consisting of the Moderate Party, the Liberal People's Party, the Centre Party and the Christian Democrats, governs Sweden since 2006 - since 2010 through a minority government. The Red-Greens were disbanded on 26 October 2010 but is still considered to be the main opposition. The Sweden Democrats party is not a member of any of these blocs, although they often support the Alliance in their decisions according to Tidningarnas Telegrambyrå, TT.[6]

Current party representation in the Riksdag
Parties1 Leaders Seats2 Votes3
bgcolor=#Template:Separtycol-s Social Democratic Party Stefan Löfven4 112 30.66%
bgcolor=#Template:Separtycol-m Moderate Party Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt 107 30.06%
bgcolor=#Template:Separtycol-mp Green Party Åsa Romson and Gustav Fridolin 25 7.34%
bgcolor=#Template:Separtycol-fp Liberal People's Party Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Education Jan Björklund 24 7.06%
bgcolor=#Template:Separtycol-c Center Party Minister for Enterprise Annie Lööf 23 6.56%
bgcolor=Template:Sweden Democrats/meta/color Sweden Democrats Jimmie Åkesson 20 5.70%
bgcolor=#Template:Separtycol-kd Christian Democratic Party Minister for Health and Social Affairs Göran Hägglund 19 5.60%
bgcolor=#Template:Separtycol-v Left Party Jonas Sjöstedt 19 5.60%
Total 349 98.58%
Government Minority 2 0.02%

Members of governing coalition in bold
1/ Party name and leaders current as of 27 January 2012
2/ Seats as per the 2010 general election, current as of 23 September 2010
3/ Percentage of the votes received in the 2010 general election
4/ Stefan Löfven is not a member of parliament and is unable to participate in parliamentary activities and debates

Elections

The parliament building from outside.

All 349 members of the Riksdag are elected in the general elections held every four years. Eligible to vote and stand for elections are Swedish Citizens who turn 18 years old no later than on the day of the election. A minimum of 4% of the national vote is required for membership in Parliament, alternatively 12% or more within a constituency. Substitutes for each deputy are elected at the same time as each election, so by-elections are rare. In the event of a snap election, the newly elected members merely serve the remainder of the four-year term.

Constituencies and national apportionment of seats

The electoral system in Sweden is proportional. Of the 349 seats in the unicameral Riksdag, 310 are fixed constituency seats allocated to constituencies in relation to the number of people entitled to vote in each constituency. The remaining 39 adjustment seats are used to correct the deviations from proportional national distribution that may arise when allocating the fixed constituency seats. There is a constraint in the system that means that only a party that has received at least four per cent of the votes in the whole country participates in the distribution of seats. However, a party that has received at least twelve per cent of the votes in a constituency participates in the distribution of the fixed constituency seats in that constituency.[7]

Latest election

2010 election

Relative support by party.
Coalition dominance by municipality (aggravated).
    Red‑Greens
    Equal
    The Alliance
Relative support of the Sweden Democrats by municipality.
    Sweden Democrats (max. 15.84% in Sjöbo)[8]

As exit polls conducted by the national broadcaster Swedish Television predicted, the Sweden Democrats reached the 4% threshold to enter parliament for the first time.[9]

A preliminary count of 5,668 voting districts showed the Alliance of Fredrik Reinfeld ahead of the Red-Greens, with 172 seats.[10] This, however, fell short of the 175 seats needed for an absolute majority and the Sweden Democrats would apparently be holding the balance of power in the new parliament.[11][12] Reinfeld declared that he had no intention to cooperate with the Sweden Democrats.[13]

On 23 September, the final results showed the Centre Party gaining an adjustment seat in Dalarna, giving the Alliance a total seat count of 173, still two seats short of an absolute majority.[14] The Alliance's Liberal People's Party ended up only 7 and 19 votes short from gaining additional seats in Gothenburg and Värmland respectively,[15] but according to Svante Linusson, a mathematician and former politician for the Stockholm Party,[citation needed] the actual margin was still over 800 votes.[16][17]

Template:Swedish general election, 2010

Reactions

On the day after the election, anti-Sweden Democrat rallies took place in a number of Swedish cities. Reports indicated that 10,000 people were estimated to have marched in Stockholm under banners reading "We are ashamed", "No racists in Parliament",[18] and "Refugees – welcome!". In Gothenburg, 5,000 people took part in a "sorrow march against racism", and 2,000 people marched in Malmö. Support for the Sweden Democrats was strongest in the southernmost province Scania, where the party received about 10% percent of the vote, and in the neighbouring province Blekinge, where they received 9.8 percent; the foreign media quoted "some people" from further north of the country as calling for Scania to be handed back to Denmark, where the Danish People's Party were seen as an inspiration for the SD.

Liberal evening tabloid Expressen wrote in an editorial "The banner of tolerance has been hauled down and the forces of darkness have finally also taken the Swedish democracy as hostage. It's a day of sorrow." Liberal conservative morning newspaper Svenska Dagbladet said "[It is] time for the Swedes to get themselves a new national self-image [as the election] created a new picture of Sweden".[19]

History

The Old Parliament House on Riddarholmen was the seat of the Riksdag from 1833 to 1905.
Kulturhuset at Sergels torg served as a temporary seat for the Riksdag, from 1971 to 1983, while the Riksdag building on Helgeandsholmen underwent renovation.

Name

Riksdag is the direct Swedish equivalent of the German Reichstag. In the Swedish constitution, the word is written with a lower-case “r”, thus marking that it is actually not a name of the parliament, but that it is just “the parliament”.

A precise English translation of this German-Nordic word does not actually exist, but "Meeting of the Realm" may serve as a literal translation, though perhaps "Diet of the Realm" would be more accurate (dag literally means "day", and is thus either cognate to the use of German tag for a Diet, or even a direct borrowing; the former comes from Latin dies with the same meaning). The word is also used by Swedish speakers for the parliaments of Finland (it is the official term used by the Swedish-speaking minority there) and Estonia, and for the old Reichstag of Germany as well as the parliament building in Berlin (reciprocally, "Reichstag" is the standard German translation of "riksdag").[clarification needed] In Sweden riksdag is today also frequently used to refer to the contemporary parliament house of Germany per se (but the Bundestag is called förbundsdag), and sometimes for national parliaments of other countries as well. The word is also used by Norwegian speakers with the same spelling; in Danish it is spelled rigsdag. However, the term is not used for the parliaments of Norway and Denmark, which are called Stortinget and Folketinget respectively (based on the Germanic þing instead of dag).

Historical roots

The roots of the modern Riksdag can be found in a 1435 meeting of the Swedish nobility in the city of Arboga. This informal organization was modified in 1527 by the first modern Swedish king Gustav I Vasa to include representatives from all the four social estates: the nobility, the clergy, the bourgeoisie (propertied commoners in the towns such as merchants, tradesmen, lawyers, etc.), and the peasantry (freehold yeoman farmers). This form of Ständestaat representation lasted until 1865, when representation by estate was abolished and the modern bicameral parliament established. Effectively, however, it did not become a parliament in the modern sense until parliamentary principles were established in the political system in Sweden, in 1917.

On 22 June 1866, the Riksdag decided to reconstitute itself as a bicameral legislature, consisting of Första kammaren or the First Chamber, with 155 members and Andra kammaren or the Second Chamber with 233 members. The First Chamber was indirectly elected by county and city councillors, while the Second Chamber was directly elected by universal suffrage. This reform was a result of great malcontent with the old Estates which were no longer able to represent the people.

By an amendment of the Swedish constitution the general election of 1970 was the first to a unicameral assembly with 350 seats. The following general election to the unicameral Riksdag in 1973 only gave the Government the support of 175 members, while the opposition could mobilize an equal force of 175 members. In a number of cases a tied vote ensued, and the final decision had to be determined by lot. To avoid any recurrence of this, the number of seats in Parliament was reduced to 349 from 1976.

See also

References

  1. ^ Instrument of Government, as of 2012. Retrieved on 2012-11-16.
  2. ^ The Riksdag Act, as of 2012. Retrieved on 2012-11-16.
  3. ^ The Swedish Constitution, Riksdagen
  4. ^ Sveriges riksdag, pressmedelande
  5. ^ "Hansson, Jenny (2008). De Folkvaldas Livsvillkor. Umea: Umea University" (PDF).
  6. ^ "Alliansens femte parti". Aftonbladet. 2011-04-20.
  7. ^ See e.g.: SOU 2008:125 En reformerad grundlag (Constitutional Reform), Prime Ministers Office.
  8. ^ "Val till riksdagen-Röster- Sjöbo". Val.se. 22 September 2010. Retrieved 5 October 2010.
  9. ^ Wikstrom, Cajsa (20 September 2010). "Swedish ruling bloc retains power". Al Jazeera English. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  10. ^ "Val till riksdagen - Valnatt" (in Swedish). val.se. 20 September 2010. Retrieved 21 September 2010.
  11. ^ McGuinness, Damien (20 September 2010). "Sweden narrowly re-elects centre-right alliance". BBC Online. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  12. ^ Lannin, Patrick (20 September 2010). "Swedish centre-right wins ballot but loses majority". Reuters. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  13. ^ Stiernstedt, Jenny (20 September 2010). "Alliansen segrar – SD blir vågmästare". Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  14. ^ "Val till riksdagen - Röster" (in Swedish). Swedish Election Authority. 23 September 2010. Retrieved 14 November 2010.
  15. ^ "Alliansens majoritetsdröm upp i rök" (in Swedish). DN.se. 23 September 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
  16. ^ "Rösterna är färdigräknade" (in Swedish). SvD.se. 23 September 2010. Retrieved 23 September 2010.
  17. ^ Superrysare, Aftonbladet
  18. ^ "Mass demonstration: We are ashamed", Sveriges Radio.
  19. ^ Magnusson, Niklas (21 September 2010). "Swedes Protest on Streets as Anti-Immigrants Enter Parliament". Bloomberg. Retrieved 26 September 2010.

59°19′39″N 18°04′03″E / 59.32750°N 18.06750°E / 59.32750; 18.06750